United Nations — The U.S. presented its case on Wednesday for the international community to punish Iran for its recent breaches of the 2015 nuclear deal, and offered incentives if Iran agrees to negotiate a new one. But as the 35-member Board of Governors of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) gathered in a boardroom in Vienna, Austria, for a closed-door meeting requested by the Trump administration, the battle lines were already drawn, and there was little hope of a unified stance.

The IAEA is the United Nations-backed global nuclear watchdog agency. It’s responsible for monitoring and verifying Iran’s compliance with the nuclear agreement. Wednesday’s special session of its board was called by U.S. Ambassador to International Organizations in Vienna Jackie Wolcott to discuss the “concerning” report by the agency’s director general, Yukiya Amano. Wolcott said, “the international community must hold the Iranian regime accountable.”The White House’s case  “Iran’s past pursuit of nuclear weapons – and its well-documented efforts to preserve and conceal information from its prior nuclear weaponization work – heightens the seriousness with which we and the international community should view these recent developments, and provides the historical context in which we must consider Iran’s current actions and announcements,” the U.S. envoy told the agency’s Board of Governors Wednesday in Vienna.Wolcott warned the agency’s delegates that, “Iran continues to make concerning statements regarding further escalatory steps it may soon take to advance its proliferation-sensitive nuclear activities.”
Until this year, the IAEA had verified Iran’s compliance with the nuclear agreement since its implementation. Mr. Trump had promised since before his election to pull the U.S. out of the deal, which he considers too generous to Tehran. He made good on that promise in May 2018 and unilaterally withdrew the U.S. from the agreement, and then imposed the harshest unilateral sanctions on Iran ever. He wants to negotiate a new deal that includes restrictions on Iran’s ballistic missile program, its aid to proxy forces around the world, and a longer time frame before the deal sunsets. Iran has said flatly that it will not renegotiate the agreement it spent years hashing out with the U.S. and other world powers. Wolcott made clear on Wednesday that the U.S. was offering Iran the potential of full diplomatic relations with Washington — something Tehran hasn’t had since 1979: “We call on Iran to reverse its recent nuclear steps and cease any plans for further advancements in the future. The United States has made clear that we are open to negotiation without preconditions, and that we are offering Iran the possibility of a full normalization of relations.”She underscored the Trump administration’s call for a new deal: “We have been clear about the need for a negotiated solution that enduringly addresses the proliferation challenges presented by Iran’s nuclear program. The JCPOA did not do so, nor did it address other aspects of Iran’s destabilizing conduct. Iran’s actions in the last two weeks further underscore the need for a comprehensive deal with Iran that addresses the totality of these concerns, ends the regime’s destabilizing behaviors and sponsorship of terrorism, and fully reintegrates Iran into the international community.”Meanwhile, in Washington, President Trump said on Twitter Wednesday that sanctions against Iran would “soon be increased, substantially!”Iran’s decision last month to breach the terms of the deal — which came after a year of warnings that they would take the action in response to the American withdrawal and sanctions — prompted Walcott to call the IAEA meeting.She pushed the other IAEA members of the agency’s “shared and serious responsibility” to confront Iran, whose actions she called “a deliberate display of disregard for key limits the IAEA is entrusted to verify.”